We were part of a program of installations, workshops, practices and conversations that were invited into the space to offer insights into the following questions:

How have we come to see ourselves as separate from each other and from the wider living metabolism that we are part of?

How has the trauma of this perceived separation affected our capacity to do, to think, to imagine, to desire, to dream, to hope and to relate?

How can we heal individual and collective traumas without guilt, shame, self- righteousness, re-wounding and drama?

What can interrupt our competition for authority and legitimacy and activate a collective visceral sense of humility, generosity and compassion that can open up new possibilities for co-existence?

What can create and sustain a sense of accountability and response-ability that overrides self-interest and is not dependent on transactions, convictions, knowledge, identity or understanding?

How can we engage and be taught by different systems of knowledge and being, struggles and attempts to create alternatives, (a)cutely aware of their gifts, limitations, contradictions, as well as our own (mis)interpretations, projections, and appropriations?

How can we hospice a dying way of knowing/being and assist with the birth of something new, still fragile, undefined and potentially (but not necessarily) wiser with radical tenderness?

How can we tap into what is perceived to be impossible? How can we allow the land to calibrate our vital compass and dream through us?